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What is your creative retirement plan?
Successful financial planning is more than advice and more than products. Successful financial planning is an attitude. How to create an atmosphere of shared goals about the future!
The idle are a peculiar kind of dead that cannot be buried.” Oriental proverb
One thing is certain - when you do not have a creative challenge during your retirement years, the idleness and its accompanying despondency blots out any chance for happiness and contentment and can even encourage an early death.
We spend a great deal of time on our retirement financial planning thinking if we have a roof over our heads and food on the table we’re all set. But no matter how big or small the roof or how limited and abundant the food, without a creative challenge to fuel your mind and spirit, the money is meaningless.
There’s a story about US President Calvin Coolidge. He died at the early age of sixty. He had an office but little or nothing was accomplished there – few came to visit. At his home, he had no hobby or interests. So empty was his life he used to go down in the cellar to watch the handy man throwing coal in the furnace.
In Michael Connelly’s novel “Lost Light”, the hero, a Los Angeles cop describes his retirement. “….I was now retired. I was supposedly comfortable. I had a house with no mortgage and a car I’d paid cash for. I had a pension that covered more than I needed covered. It was like being on vacation. No work, no worries, no problems. But something was wrong and deep down I knew it. I was living like a jazz musician waiting for a gig. I was staying up late, staring at the walls and drinking too much red wine. I needed to pawn my instrument or find a place to play it.”
That is not a good place to be.
One important lesson I learned during my retirement years is when fuelled by continuous creative challenges, the ability to originate new ideas does not diminish with age. When you think of your retirement years, remember age is just a number - health, heart and mind determine age.
In his book, “Staying Young Beyond Your Years”, Dr. Howard Wilcox Haggard notes that many people have acquired the habit of NOT learning – they allowed themselves to get out of the habit of learning.
Don’t fall into that trap. If you are planning for your retirement remember - to be a happy, contented and creatively-active older person is to make yourself a happy, contented and creatively-active younger person.
If you are retired NOW is the time to step up to the plate and go for a creative homerun. Create a life work that pops you out of bed in the morning.
From my retirement journal here are a few extras – retirement add-ons that wrap a blue ribbon around a happy, contented and challenging retirement.
See don’t just look - study the beauty that surrounds you. Take time to sit on a park bench or on a lakeshore and play the “Positive Game”. Make a mental list of all the positives around you – the laughter of children playing – a couple holding hands – the structure of a flower – the movements of a bee.
Spend time with the younger generation – their youthfulness will rub off on you. My grandchildren keep me young in mind and spirit.
This was tough for me at the beginning, but I now admit exercise is vital – even my daily thirty minute hike works wonders. Play the positive game on your walk I download motivational books and listened to them on my portable CD player while I’m walking.
“Do not act as though you had a thousand years to live” Marcus Aurelius
About the Author
Dave Wright is a retired television reporter and editor of www.PPPretirementplans.com a site dedicated to the development of creative home based business opportunities.
By: Dave Wright
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